It was revealed yesterday during the launch of the 7th edition of 'Rwanda Governance Scorecard (RGS).
Each of eight pillars on which the research was entrenched on showed an improvement compared to the previous year but indicated gaps to be filled.
The CEO of RGB, Dr Usta Kaitesi explained that research findings indicated constant improvements for some pillars like security and justice and slowdown in some areas.
'There are great improvements in the areas of security, justice, fighting against corruption, transparency and accountability on a commendable progress that should not step back. Areas that need special attention for improvement are related to service delivery, eradicating poverty, streamlining systems aimed at eliminating stunting and concerting efforts to drive Rwandans into technology whereby we have committed at 100% digital services among public institutions in the National Strategy for Transformation 1,' she said.
The Minister in the Office of the Presidency, Judith Uwizeye who graced the event highlighted that Rwandans are the primary beneficiaries of Rwanda Governance Scorecard and assured commitment for the implementation of recommendations.
'We have the interest of generating data that tells us the truth that anybody else cannot tell us. Transformational Governance is a key pillar of National Strategy for Transformation (NST1). Thus, the Government of Rwanda is committed to implement the recommendations of this edition of Rwanda Governance Scorecard for the good of our citizens,' she said.
Other areas of priority that need improvement include, social protection, poverty reduction and climate change resilience, improving quality education to attain knowledge based economy, boosting Made in Rwanda products value chain to compete at the international market and tackling imbalance between imports and exports.
RGS is an independent annual publication of the RGB that seeks to gauge the state of governance in Rwanda, comprehensively assesses governance in using both primary and secondary data sources.
It is mainly designed to generate credible and reliable data on governance issues, serves as practical tool that drives policy reform in the domain of governance through the identification of areas for improvement and generates actionable recommendations and to contribute to current and authentic knowledge formation about Rwanda.
The launch of the 7th scorecard held yesterday was attended by various officials from private, public institutions, civil society organizations, higher learning institutions and research centers.
The research carried out was entrenched on eight pillars namely; :(1) Rule of Law, (2) Political Rights and Civil liberties, (3) Participation and Inclusiveness, (4) Safety and Security,(5) Investing in Human and Social Development, (6)Control of corruption, Transparency and Accountability, (7) Quality of service delivery,(8) Economic and corporate governance.
The pillar of Security came on top scoring 95,44% in 2020 from 94,29% of 2019, the Rule of Law performed at 87,86% from 84,70 % of last year, Political Rights and Civil liberties scored 85,76 % from 85,17 % while Participation and Inclusiveness got 81,96% from 73 % of last year.
The pillar of Investing in Human and Social Development scored 73,32% from 68,53%, Control of corruption, Transparency and Accountability got 86,28% from 84,28%, Quality of service delivery scored 78,31 % from 70,54 % while Economic and corporate governance scored 78,14% from 76,43% of last year.
IGIHE